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Pressure overload induces ISG15 to facilitate adverse ventricular remodeling and promote heart failure.

Authors :
Yerra VG
Batchu SN
Kaur H
Kabir MDG
Liu Y
Advani SL
Tran DT
Sadeghian S
Sedrak P
Billia F
Kuzmanov U
Gramolini AO
Qasrawi DO
Petrotchenko EV
Borchers CH
Connelly KA
Advani A
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation [J Clin Invest] 2023 May 01; Vol. 133 (9). Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 May 01.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Inflammation promotes adverse ventricular remodeling, a common antecedent of heart failure. Here, we set out to determine how inflammatory cells affect cardiomyocytes in the remodeling heart. Pathogenic cardiac macrophages induced an IFN response in cardiomyocytes, characterized by upregulation of the ubiquitin-like protein IFN-stimulated gene 15 (ISG15), which posttranslationally modifies its targets through a process termed ISGylation. Cardiac ISG15 is controlled by type I IFN signaling, and ISG15 or ISGylation is upregulated in mice with transverse aortic constriction or infused with angiotensin II; rats with uninephrectomy and DOCA-salt, or pulmonary artery banding; cardiomyocytes exposed to IFNs or CD4+ T cell-conditioned medium; and ventricular tissue of humans with nonischemic cardiomyopathy. By nanoscale liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, we identified the myofibrillar protein filamin-C as an ISGylation target. ISG15 deficiency preserved cardiac function in mice with transverse aortic constriction and led to improved recovery of mouse hearts ex vivo. Metabolomics revealed that ISG15 regulates cardiac amino acid metabolism, whereas ISG15 deficiency prevented misfolded filamin-C accumulation and induced cardiomyocyte autophagy. In sum, ISG15 upregulation is a feature of pathological ventricular remodeling, and protein ISGylation is an inflammation-induced posttranslational modification that may contribute to heart failure development by altering cardiomyocyte protein turnover.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1558-8238
Volume :
133
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37115698
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI161453